Deglacial temperature history of West Antarctica

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
By: , and 

Links

Abstract

The most recent glacial to interglacial transition constitutes a remarkable natural experiment for learning how Earth’s climate responds to various forcings, including a rise in atmospheric CO2. This transition has left a direct thermal remnant in the polar ice sheets, where the exceptional purity and continual accumulation of ice permit analyses not possible in other settings. For Antarctica, the deglacial warming has previously been constrained only by the water isotopic composition in ice cores, without an absolute thermometric assessment of the isotopes’ sensitivity to temperature. To overcome this limitation, we measured temperatures in a deep borehole and analyzed them together with ice-core data to reconstruct the surface temperature history of West Antarctica. The deglacial warming was 11.3±1.811.3±1.8∘C, approximately two to three times the global average, in agreement with theoretical expectations for Antarctic amplification of planetary temperature changes. Consistent with evidence from glacier retreat in Southern Hemisphere mountain ranges, the Antarctic warming was mostly completed by 15 kyBP, several millennia earlier than in the Northern Hemisphere. These results constrain the role of variable oceanic heat transport between hemispheres during deglaciation and quantitatively bound the direct influence of global climate forcings on Antarctic temperature. Although climate models perform well on average in this context, some recent syntheses of deglacial climate history have underestimated Antarctic warming and the models with lowest sensitivity can be discounted.

Publication type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Title Deglacial temperature history of West Antarctica
Series title Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
DOI 10.1073/pnas.1609132113
Volume 113
Issue 50
Year Published 2016
Language English
Publisher PNAS
Contributing office(s) Geosciences and Environmental Change Science Center
Description 6 p.
First page 14249
Last page 14254
Other Geospatial Antarctica
Google Analytic Metrics Metrics page
Additional publication details